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14 Money, Banking, and Financial Institutions McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2012 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Money is anything that is generally acceptable in exchange for goods, services, economic resources, or for the settlement of debts •Eliminates the coincidence of wants problem. •Facilitates economic specialization 1. Medium of exchange 2. Unit of account 3. Store of value (or wealth) Liquidity refers to two properties of assets or stores of value, namely: •The ready convertibility of the asset to generalized purchasing power (or money) •The comparative safety of the asset. Money is the most liquid asset available under normal circumstances Farmland, commercial real estate Ceramics, art, rugs, rare coins Treasury bills, commercial paper Least liquid Most liquid Specialized equipment Home equity Government and corporate bonds, Savings and equities time deposits Currency, checkable deposits Anything that serves both as money and as a commodity; money that has intrinsic worth. Bank notes that exchange for a specific commodity, such as gold Examples 1. Tobacco warehouse receipts 2. The Goldsmith bankers Fiat Money: Anything which serves as a means of payment by government declaration This Note Is Legal Tender For All Debts, Public and Private You are willing to accept money not because it is “backed” by precious metals; but rather because you know it is generally acceptable in exchange These are measures of the money supply. We add together all assets that are liquid enough to be classified as money The narrow measure of the money supply; includes only the most liquid assets M1 equals Plus: Plus: Currency and coin in circulation Checkable deposits Travelers’ checks A broader measure of the money supply favored by many economists. M2 equals Plus: Plus: Plus: Plus: M1 Miscellaneous near monies Small denomination time deposits Savings deposits Money market deposit accounts Money Definitions January 2010 Source: Federal Reserve System LO1 14-13 What “Backs” the Money Supply? • Guaranteed by government’s ability to • • LO2 keep value stable Money as debt Why is money valuable? • Acceptability • Legal tender • Relative scarcity 14-14 What “Backs” the Money Supply? • Prices affect purchasing power of • • LO2 money Hyperinflation renders money unacceptable Stabilizing money’s purchasing power • Intelligent management of the money supply – monetary policy • Appropriate fiscal policy 14-15 Purchasing power of $1 measured in 1982-1984 constant dollars An increase in the price level over time reduces what $1.00 buys. The price level has risen every year since 1960, so the purchasing power of $1.00 (measured in 1982-1984 constant dollars) has fallen from $3.38 in 1960 to $0.48 in 2007 16 The Monetary System The monetary system consists of the Federal Reserve and the banks and other institutions that accept deposits and provide the services that enable people and businesses to make and receive payments. Financial Intermediaries These units are interposed between depositors and borrowers 1. Commercial banks 2. Thrift institutions 3. Money market funds: A financial institution that obtains funds by selling shares and uses these funds to purchase assets such as U.S. Treasury bills. By bringing together both sides of the money market , banks serve as intermediaries or go-betweens. Banks reduce the transactions costs of channeling saving to creditworthy borrowers. •Coping with asymmetric information. •Reducing risk through diversification. Banks must be ready for customers’ withdrawals, so liquid bank assets are desirable. At the same time, less liquid assets such as commercial and real estate loans are more profitable. A Typical Bank Balance Sheet Assets Cash in vault Reserves on account Federal funds sold Government securities Loans Liabilities Demand(checkable) deposits Savings deposits Time deposits Federal funds bought The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) •Created in 1933 •A government agency that insures deposits in commercial banks (up to $100,000 per account). •Banks pay premiums to the FDIC Bank failures were often a “selffulfilling prophesy.” •The history of banking in the U.S. prior to 1913 is messy—featuring widespread panic and runs on banks—for example, in 1893 and 1907. •The Federal Reserve System was created in 1913. The Structure of the Federal Reserve System President appoints Senate confirms Chair of Board of Governors Board of Governors (7 members, including chair) • Supervises and regulates member banks • Supervises 12 Federal Reserve District Banks • Sets reserve requirements and approves discount rate Federal Open Market Committee (7 Governors + 5 Reserve Bank Presidents) • Conducts open market operations to control the money supply Appoints 3 directors of each Federal Reserve Bank 12 Federal Reserve District Banks • Lend reserves • Clear checks • Provide currency Elect 6 directors of each Federal Reserve Bank 3,500 Member Banks Federal Reserve - Banking System • Historical background • Board of Governors • 12 Federal Reserve Banks • Serve as the central bank • Quasi-public banks • Banker’s bank LO3 14-25 Federal Reserve – Banking System Board of Governors Federal Open Market Committee 12 Federal Reserve Banks Commercial Banks Thrift Institutions (Savings and Loan Associations, Mutual Savings Banks, Credit Unions) The Public (Households and Businesses) LO3 14-26 Federal Reserve – Banking System The 12 Federal Reserve Banks LO3 14-27 Federal Reserve – Banking System • Federal Open Market Committee • Aids Board of Governors in • LO3 setting monetary policy • Conducts open market operations Commercial banks and thrifts • 6,800 commercial banks • 8,700 thrifts 14-28 Federal Reserve Functions • Issue currency • Set reserve requirements • Lend money to banks • Collect checks • Act as a fiscal agent for U.S. • • LO4 government Supervise banks Control the money supply 14-29 Federal Reserve Independence • Established by Congress as an • • LO4 independent agency Protects the Fed from political pressures Enables the Fed to take actions to increase interest rates in order to stem inflation as needed 14-30 Financial Institutions World’s 12 Largest Financial Institutions, 2009 0 Assets (Trillions of U.S. Dollars) 1.5 2.5 3.5 Royal Bank of Scotland (UK) Barclays (UK) Deutsche Bank (Germany) BNP Paribas (France) HSBC Holdings (UK) JPMorgan Chase (US) Credit Agricole (France) Citigroup (US) Mitsubishi UFJ (Japan) UBS (Switzerland) ING Group (Netherlands) Bank of America (US) Source: Forbes Global 2000, http://www.forbes.com LO4 14-31 The Financial Crisis of 2007 and 2008 • Mortgage Default Crisis • Many causes • Government programs that encouraged home ownership • Declining real estate values • Bad incentives provided by mortgage-backed bonds LO5 14-32 The Financial Crisis of 2007 and 2008 • Securitization- the process of slicing • • LO5 up and bundling groups of loans into new securities As loans defaulted, the system collapsed “Underwater” homeowners abandoned homes and mortgages 14-33 The Financial Crisis of 2007 and 2008 • Failures and near-failures of financial • LO5 firms • Countrywide: second largest lender • Washington Mutual: largest lender • Wachovia Other firms came close 14-34 The Financial Crisis of 2007 and 2008 • Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) • Allocated $700 billion to make emergency loans • Saved several institutions from failure LO6 14-35 The Financial Crisis of 2007 and 2008 • The Fed’s lender-of-last-resort activities • Primary Dealer Credit Facility • Term Securities Lending Facility • Asset-Backed Commercial Paper Money Market Mutual Fund Liquidity Facility • Commercial Paper Funding Facility LO6 14-36 The Financial Crisis of 2007 and 2008 • Money Market Investor Funding Facility • Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility • Interest Payments on Reserves LO6 14-37 Post-Crisis U.S. Financial Services • Major Categories of Financial Institutions • Commercial Banks • Thrifts • Insurance Companies • Mutual Fund Companies • Pension Funds • Securities Firms • Investment Banks LO7 14-38 Major Categories of Financial Institutions LO7 Institution Description Examples Commercial Banks State and national banks that provide checking and savings accounts and make loans JP Morgan Chase, Bank of America, Citibank, Wells Fargo Thrifts Savings and loan associations, mutual savings banks, credit unions that offer checking and savings accounts and make loans Charter One, New York Community Bank Insurance Companies Firms that offer policies through which individuals pay premiums to insure against lose Prudential, New York Life, Northwestern Mutual, Hartford Mutual Fund Companies Firms that pool customer deposits to purchase stocks or bonds Fidelity, Vanguard, Putnam, Janus, T Rowe Price Pension Funds Institutions that collect savings from workers throughout their working years and then invest the funds to pay retirement benefits TIAA-CREF, Teamsters’ Union, CalPERs Securities Firms Firms that offer security advice and buy and sell stocks and bonds for clients Merrill Lynch, Smith Barney, Charles Schwab Investment Banks Firms that help corporations and governments raise money by selling stocks and bonds Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, Deutsche Bank, Nomura Securities 14-39 Post-Crisis U.S. Financial Services • Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act • Passed to help prevent many of the practices that led to the crisis • Critics say it adds heavy regulatory costs LO7 14-40 Electronic Banking • Electronic-based payment systems have pushed aside currency and checks • Credit/debit cards • Fedwire transfers • ACH transactions • Electronic money • Stored-value cards 14-41